TURNTABLE TALK

NBC Symphony Orchestra
conducted by Arturo Toscanini

SYMPOSIUM 1240

The brash, naked sounds of the side-drum in La Gazza Ladra is
simply vintage Toscanini. No other conductor (not even Beecham) could conjure
such a sense of power in those opening staccatos, it is almost like a barrage
of rifles going off! The speed is exhilarating, and the dashing Italianate
charm is never far away. Zampa is similarly brilliant although here,
I thought that the overture is too hard driven, in many ways I felt much
more drawn to Geoffrey Toye's exquisite acoustic account (1923, Beulah),
although that sound is primitive. But there are treasures of undoubted value
in this magnificent Toscanini reissue. The Italian maestro was never very
famous for his Strauss but the American NBC Orchestra could almost be the
vintage VPO in this incredibly buoyant Blue Danube However the real
highlight of this compilation is the mercurial account of The Hebrides,
this is indeed vintage Mendelssohn. Once again, Beecham's pre-war LPO recording
is the benchmark and if that has a greater sense of mystery and fascination,
this 1940's version by the Italian giant, is so viscerally exciting that
it could almost be Wagnerian in its passionate intensity. And there are
further surprises in the Barber Adagio which carries an incredible amount
of Latin warmth, all of this is married with a sense of glitziness that
is almost disarming. Still, it is better to listen to this collection in
fits and starts as it may contain something you had missed first time round!
Toscanini's way with the Ponchielli piece is also amazing, here it really
pays to have those legendary fast tempi applied to the grotesque happenings
of La Gioconda. This leaves three items by Bizet, Prokofiev and Wolf-Ferrari.
The Carmen-Suite is bubbly and also hard-driven with an almost frenetic
Habanera. Im afraid the Prokofiev Classical Symphony has to
be ruled out of court for its disjointed and fragmentary nature, and it
is ruthlessly driven along, to the general detriment of the work. But Il
Segreto di Susanna is a miracle of warmth and fantastic pictorial invention,
a gem to end a truly amazing CD. Symposium's remastering is laudable, the
dry 40's recordings come up with an amazing amount of vitality although
you can never really eliminate that infamous Studio 8-H cavernous acoustic.
There is also a detailed chronology of Toscanini that highlights the important
points of his career and some copious notes which make for essential reading.
There has been a lot of hype in regard to Naxos' recent batch of Toscanini
releases, but to my mind this takes the cake for a truly outstanding historical
document.